Abstract
Objective
The presence of tissue eosinophilia is a determinate of disease severity in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). The impact of eosinophilic mucin (EM) as an independent variable has not yet been elucidated.
Study Design
Retrospective review.
Setting
Tertiary academic clinic.
Results
192 patients with CRS were included in the study. 87 were diagnosed with eosinophilic CRS with polyps, 58 with eosinophilic CRS without polyps, 14 with noneosinophilic CRS with polyps, and 33 with noneosinophilic CRS without polyps. Only patients with eosinophilia had EM on pathology. Of eosinophilic CRS, 50% of patients with polyps and 12% of cases without polyps demonstrated EM, respectively. EM presence portended more severe disease in patients with eosinophilia on subjective and objective scores preoperatively (P < 0.005). Postoperatively, EM patients experienced a greater improvement of symptoms, but continued to have worse endoscopy scores until 1.5 years. A tissue eosinophil count of 30 or greater per HPF was identified as a potential marker for the development of EM.
Conclusions
The presence of eosinophilic mucin predicts overall worse disease severity in patients with eosinophilic CRS.
Keywords
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